
MAO TSE-TUNG ON PRACTICE Written in 1937, this critical essay attacked misconceptions about the role of theory and practice prevalent at the time among certain circles of the Chinese Communist Party, INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHERS NEW YORK ON PRACTICE By Mao Tse-tung In the study of the problem of knowledge, pre-Marxist material­ ism leaves man’s social nature and historical development out of account. Hence it cannot explain the dependence of cognition upon social practice—its dependence upon production and class struggle. First of all, a Marxist regards human productive activity as the most fundamental practice determining all other human activities. As a cognitive being, man depends mainly upon his activity in material production for a gradual understanding of nature’s phenomena, its characteristics, its laws, and its relation to himself; at the same time, through productive activity, man comes to understand gradually and in varying degrees certain human interrelations. No such knowledge can be obtained apart from productive activity. In a classless society everyone, in his capacity as one of its members, works together with other members of society, comes into certain relations of production with them, and engages in production to solve the problem of man’s material life. In various kinds of class societies members of society from all classes come in different ways into certain relations of production with each other and engage in produc­ tion to solve the same problem. This is the fundamental source of the development of human knowledge. Productive activity is not the only form of man’s social prac­ tice. There are various other forms—class struggle, political life, scientific and artistic activities. In short, man participates as a social being in every sphere of the actual life of society. Thus, besides his cognition of the things of material life, man comes to know in varying degrees the different kinds of human rela­ tions through his political and cultural life closely connected with his material life. Among these, class struggle in its various forms especially exerts a profound influence on the development of man’s knowledge. In a class society everyone lives with a certain class status, and all his thoughts are stamped with the seal of his class. 1 T According to the Marxist, man’s activity in social production develops step by step from a low stage to a high stage, and consequently man’s knowledge, whether of nature or of society, also develops step by step from a low stage to a high stage, from the elementary to the advanced, and from the one-sided to the many-sided. For a very long period in human history, people were, as they could only be, limited to an understanding of the history of society in its individual phases. This was due on the one hand to its constant distortion by the exploiting classes with their biased views, and on the other to the small scale of production which limited the breadth of view of the people. Not until the modern proletariat appeared, along with greatly increased productive forces or big industry, did man begin to have a comprehensive and historical understanding of the devel­ opment of society and turn his knowledge of society into a sci­ ence. This is none other than the science of Marxism. According to the Marxist, man’s social practice alone is the criterion of truth in his cognition of the external world, for in actuality human cognition is verified only when man arrives at the results predicted, through the process of social practice, namely, through the processes of material production, of class struggle, and of scientific experiments. If anyone wants to be successful in his work or to achieve the anticipated results, he must make his ideas correspond to the laws of the external world; otherwise he will fail in practice. It is from failure that one derives lessons and corrects one’s ideas so as to make them correspond to the laws of the external world. This is how one turns failure into success. This is exactly what is meant by failure being the mother of success, and by “a fall into the pit, a gain in your wit.” The epistemology of dialectical materialism raises practice to a position of primary importance. It regards human knowledge as being at no point separable from practice, refuting all the incorrect theories which deny the importance of practice or which separate knowledge from it. Thus Lenin said, ‘Tractice is more important than (theoretical) knowledge because it not only has the virtue of universality but also the virtue of direct reality.”1 Marxist philosophy, dialectical materialism, has two most 2 outstanding characteristics. One is its class nature: it openly declares itself to be in the service of the proletariat. The other is its practicality: it emphasizes the dependence of theory on practice, practice being the foundation of theory which in turn serves practice. One’s theory or cognition is judged to be true or untrue not by how it is subjectively felt to be, but by what objectively is the result in social practice. The criterion of truth can only be social practice. The viewpoint which emphasizes practice, is primary and basic in the epistemology of dialectical materialism.2 But how, after all, does human knowledge arise from prac­ tice and serve practice in turn? This will be dear after an ex­ amination of the developing process of cognition. At first man sees in the process of practice only the phenomena of things, their individual aspects, and their external relations to each other. For instance, a number of outside people came to Yenan on an observation tour. On the first day or two, they saw the topography, the streets, and the houses of Yenan; met people; went to feasts, evening parties, and mass meetings; heard what was talked about; read what was written—these are the phenomena of things, their individual aspects, and their external relations. This is called the perceptual stage of knowl­ edge, namely, the stage of sensation and imagery. It is also the first stage of knowledge, the stage in which these different things in Yenan affected the sense organs of the gentlemen of the ob­ servation commission, gave rise to sensations, and left many images in their brains, together with a crude outline of their external relations. At this stage one cannot as yet form profound concepts or draw logical conclusions. With the continuation of man’s social practice, the sensa­ tions and images of a thing are repeated innumerable times in his practice and then a sudden change in the cognitive process takes place in his brain, resulting in the formation of concepts. Concepts as such no longer represent the phenomena of things, their individual aspects, or their external relations. Through concepts man comes to gr^sp a thing in its entirety, its essence, and its internal relations. Conception is not only quantitatively but also qualitatively different from perception. Proceeding from concepts, we can employ the method of judgment and inference 3 and arrive at logical conclusions. What is known as “knit your brows, and the idea comes to your mind” in the Tale of the Three Kingdoms, or “let me think” in our workaday language, refers to the employment of concepts in our brains to form judgments and draw inferences. This is the second stage of knowledge. After having gathered various kinds of data and in addition reflected on them, the gentlemen of the observation commission may arrive at the judgment: The policy of the National Anti­ Japanese United Front pursued by the Communist Party is thorough, sincere, and honest. If these gentlemen themselves were sincerely in favor of unity for national salvation, then after having made the above judgment, they could go a step further and conclude that “the National Anti-Japanese United Front can succeed.” In the complete process of knowing a thing, this stage of conception, judgment, and inference is more important than the first stage. It is the stage of rational knowledge. The real task of cognition is to arrive at thought through perception, at a gradual understanding of the internal contra­ dictions of objective things, their laws, the internal relations between this and that process—that is, at rational knowledge. To repeat, the reason why rational knowledge is different from perceptual knowledge is that perceptual knowledge is knowl­ edge of a thing in its individual aspects, its appearance, and its external relations, whereas rational knowledge, marking a great step in advance, is knowledge of a thing in its entirety, its es­ sence, and its internal relations. When one arrives at rational knowledge, one is able to reveal the internal contradictions of the surrounding world and thus grasp the development of that world by considering it in its entirety—the internal relations of and between all its aspects. Before the advent of Marxism no one had proposed a theory of knowledge that takes into account the developing process of cognition that is based on practice, that proceeds from the ele­ mentary to the advanced, and that is dialectically materialistic. Marxist materialism for the first time correctly solved this prob­ lem, pointing out both materialistically and dialectically the ever-deepening process of cognition, a process that turns per­ ceptual knowledge into rational knowledge through the complex 4 and regularly recurring practices of man as a social being in his production and class struggle. Lenin said: “The abstract con­ cept of matter, of a law of nature, of economic value or any other scientific (i.e., correct and basic, not false or superficial) abstraction reflects nature more deeply, truly, fully.”3 According to Marxism-Leninism, what characterizes respectively the two stages of the process of cognition is that in the lower stage knowledge appears in perceptual form and in the higher stage in rational form; each of these two stages, however, constitutes a stage in one united process of cognition.
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